Postby Brody » May 24th, 2006 5:22 am
yea, for いadj, drop the い and add くて. For な verbs just add で where な would come. Keep doing this until you get to the last adjective, which conjugates like normal. Also keep in mind that the adjectives techincally have to all be positive or negative, thus you can't say the "quiet, not clean boy." You would have to separate the adjectives, such as with が
here's an example: the big, lively town square: 大きくて、にぎやかな広場(ひろば)
switch them around: the lively, big town square: にぎやかで大きい広場。
as for combining positive and negative verbs, it may seem to be a limitation at first, that you would in effect have to say, the boy is quiet, but not clean" and not just "the quiet, not clean boy." I had this trouble at first; I was mad I had to do the extra work when I thought "quiet, not clean" was perfectly acceptable. But then I quickly realized we don't say that in English (i.e. saying "the quiet, not clean" anything sounds very unnatural), so I saw I wasn't doing extra work. A short cut I found was just to use the antonym of "not clean," that is, dirty. While this may carry negative connontations, it is in fact a positive adjective, at least in terms of conjugation, and makes life much easier.